Once, as a young lad in Manchester, in a time long ago, I waited outside the stage door of the Opera House for an autograph from Charles Laughton. There was vast crowd of fans waiting for him and I reckoned my chance of getting his signature was very low. Quay Street runs up past the theatre and at the top of the road was the posh Midland Hotel. I thought there was a good chance that he was staying there and might actually walk down to the theater. I left the crowd and turned up Quay Street and there coming towards me was the unmistakeable figure of the great actor. I dashed up to him and offered him my autograph album. He gave me a big smile and said he would sign for me at the stage door. He put his arm round my shoulder and we walked back to the stage door together. Laughton was pleasantness itself in our brief conversation. At the stage door the crowd surged forward and I was pushed to one side. Charles Laughton stopped at the door, turned round and said "I'll sign for everybody, but him first", pointing to me. The crowd parted, like Charlton Heston parting the Red Sea, and I got my autograph. I've never forgotten how kind Laughton was.
I watched the ' I, Claudius' show as a kid in the 70's and it was fascinating, but I did not realize that the book was written in the 30's. Thanks to YT I learned something new
I agree with Dirk Bogarde: Laughton's speech before the Roman Senate is one of the most epic pieces of acting I've ever seen. What a tragedy that this film was never completed.
Bobbnoxious It should be read before the U.S.Senate, by the ghosts of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt(I said Bully Pulpit, not BS or a bully's pulpit), Franklin Roosevelt, and perhaps Bernie Sanders(not quite ghost but more ghost like, sorry Senator!).
What a sumptuous, magnificent and touching film this would have been. A great tragedy that it did not come to fruition. The sets are glorious, stupendous...one is left with a gnawing sense of loss.
2023....Cladius speaks for the heart of millions of common man....Charles Laughton brought back Claudius from the dead. It was indeed a real resirrection!
"I Claudius " would have been a masterpiece and Laughton acknowledged as the greatest of them all, not only by the ones who already admired his work but by everyone who had ever stepped inside a cinema. He deserved it, a man of an exceptional talent, a tormented soul, a theatrical genius. I could suggest Simon Callow's remarkable book "Charles Laughton a Difficult Actor" as well as Dirk Bogarde's autobiography "Snakes and Ladders" the latter to pay homage to a sensitive actor , Dirk Bogarde, writing about the demands and rewards of working with great directors. Penny Angelopoulou
OMG!! Those surviving scenes are soooo good! The gentleman playing Caligula is superb! Flora Robson and Charles Laughton. and Merle Oberon, to die for! Watching this is more interesting than the crap being made today.
Oh yes Caligula was great here , wasn't he! Played by Emlyn Williams, noted playwright and actor -- love his work. What a sublime cast was assembled for this project...and as a bonus, hosted by the equally sublime Dirk Bogarde.
I am big fan of BBC I Claudius (1976). Later I read the books by Graves, and just in recent years heard about this unfinished movie. Great post. Thank you.
How interesting to hear that Flora Robson was chosen to play the elderly Livia , Yet in the BBC and activation Sian Phillips played the same role from beginning to end… And she always looked so elegant. Such a shame that BBC has blocked their version on copyright reasons… I really enjoyed this document that you posted thanks for sharing it with us
i feel so lucky watching this splendid documentary. real cinema history. such a great great cast. and i always have adored dirk van bogarde's work-his narrating/hosting this is sublime. i understand the difficulties actors go through preparing for roles. i've always had great admiration for charles laughton. just love everybody.
dirk bogarde is/was one of my favorite actors. same with charles laughton. i could really feel his pain struggling in his part with his lines and i thought him very brave. and wonderful. acting can be a killer and preparing-nightmarish. but it can also be terrific.
Charles Laughton was in my opinion one of the best film actors of all time. This film if it could have been completed would have added to Hunchback, Witness for..., Mutiny......, and Henry.....When you watch Laughton he is compelling.........
This is one precious piece of history to be treasured and held up as an example, not just the unfinished film but the documentary itself and it's belief in imperfect humanity.
+Garry Harville Au contraire, mes amis. There is, and only will be, one Lord Olivier. "Emotional depth" brought to a performance is not so easy to obtain or achieve. Looking at the breath of both CL's and LO' acting careers, you realize that both actors were superb. Both could convey more with a gesture of the hand or movement of the head or eyes. To see LO on stage was breathtaking. CL's performance in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" had reviting moments. So let's keep things in perspective and avoid hyperbole.
Read the books and watched the 1976 series many, many times. Its my favourite followed by Glenda Jackson in Elizabeth R. I so wish this film had been made. The parts that survive are wonderful.
Incredible presentation of "The Epic That Never Was", which is one of the several specials that first ever aired as part of PBS' Festival '77 Membership Pledge Drive on most PBS stations across the country including my local PBS station: KPBS San Diego, Circa Sunday March 13th, 1977, Some Great Things to See on Public TV!!
I only hope there is an alternate reality in which this film was completed and I will be able to see it someday. I remember watching Laughton's Quasimodo as a child. Like many children, I was immune to the suffering of others, but in Laughton I discovered I could cry for someone else.
I haven’t seen this since college. I was fortunate to see it one evening with “The making of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid”. I, Claudius was wonderful!
Amazing documentary. Charles Laughton is possibly the most talented screen actor of all time. So sad to think all those featured are no longer with us.
Paul Lewis Wasn't that the TrumpBack of Notre Dame I saw hanging off one of those gargoyles, idiotically Tweeting out instructions to the Parisian firefighters, who muttered their Gallic cynicism sotto voice, and directed one of their spare water hoses straight at him; the orange tan melted, and the wannabe wouldabe emperor was seen to have what we all suspected, no clothes.
The inside story of movies like this is fascinating. Great work and to add there is just so much great movie and television coming from the U.K. Best of luck on your channel.
OMG, not only is Dirk Bogarde one of the saddest losses to womankind ever, he makes this piece of film seem very modern with his presentation which seems so sophisticated and...human given the style of the day. And Thora Robson....glorious.
Funny coincidence: Charles Laughton played Claudius in the unfinished 1937 film version of I, Claudius and years later would go on to play a senator named Gracchus in another movie about Rome. Derek Jacobi played Claudius in the BBC production of I, Claudius and years later would go on to play a senator named Gracchus in another movie about Rome.
Here's a scene from "Spartacus" that features Laughton as Gracchus, along with Peter Ustinov and Laurence Olivier. It is they who helped to make it the memorable and classic epic that it has become ... ua-cam.com/video/SN-igTmfdiE/v-deo.html
Has anyone seen the Short on TCM where Peter Graves talks about working on "Night of The Hunter" with Laughton directing? He said it was sad that Charles didn't direct another movie because he was so good at it. The crew, especially himself and Mitchum, thought he was a natural and was so thoughtful. Graves spoke of doing a scene and when it was over he (Graves) asked Laughton "is that OK with you?" and Laughton returned with, "Was it OK with YOU?". Which, by the sound of it, Graves sounded pleasantly surprised because most directors are control freaks - not that this is a bad thing.
Ted Hackett. Remember the line from Airplane(1980)- I haven't felt this bad since- update, 2019, the last Trump tweet. It was actually said by a passenger on the ill fated aircraft this way: Since the last Ronald Reagan movie. Was living in LA that summer, saw Airplane in a movie theater; at this line, the audience erupted in uncontrollable laughter. Surely I'm hearing? Not at all- and don't call me Shirley.
Wow -- what a gem! Thank you ever so much. Laughton and Dirk Bogarde? And Merle Oberon and Flora Robson? And Alexander Korda and Josef von Sternberg, and -- it flopped? Wow. Can't wait to watch this. Oh, thanks!
Thanks. That's the great thing about UA-cam. It's a vast archive of recordings of all kinds of subjects which you seldom, if ever, hear or see anywhere else!
if you look for the word 'elegance' in the dictionary you'll find a picture of Dirk Bogard. if you look for the word 'acting', you'll find Charles Laughton.
Imagine how marvelous this film would've been if they'd managed to complete it. Even just watching what we have of Laughton's performance, I'm moved. 😢 Edit. Claudius is thought by all, save his grandmother to be a fool, and he plays the part well. Yet in the scene where he faces Caligula, we see his pragmatic sharp wit at work as he "humbles" himself to save his skin. This is but a prelude to his eventual rise to the role of Emperor in the senate chamber with those marvelous speeches. God, Laughton was magnificent
I'd known for years some footage existed, but had no idea they'd done this documentary. Seeing those few precious completed scenes set every hair on end. What a massively tragic loss! I can't agree with Emlyn Williams. All artists suffer during this or that project. That's often what makes their work so brilliant, and this film would have been one of the greatest in cinema history. At least this documentary gives us a taste, if all too brief.
This film was being made at the same time as King George VI was beginning his reign after the abdication of his brother Edward VIII. As George VI had a terrible stutter, it was felt by many involved in this production that the portrayal and for the most part ridicule of an Emperor who also stuttered was unseemly and unpatriotic. It would have caused too much embarrassment to the King and I think this played some part in the decision by Korda to close down the production. Merle Oberon's accident was simply an excuse and provided them with a get out and a substantial insurance claim.
Have had the 1976 I, CLAUDIUS disc set for years & finally got around to watching the set. Found I rather enjoyed it. Left you wanting to see Claudius survive. Then there is THIS gem. In particular the parts beginning @ 46:30 up until he sees Caligula being quite clever & invoke a certain degree of worthy chuckles...at the wit of Laughton's Claudius. Derek Jacobi's take was a worthy successor & effectively flawless but I must say Laughton set a high bar with just these few surviving scenes alone that wasn't quite crossed. Even this Caligula delivery for that matter(!) with it's rather more lighthearted antithesis to John Hurt sadist... I write this even as I finished watching the last scenes on the DVD. Wishing it had succeeded to be the full feature it was intended. Damn shame...
Thankfully the BBC came up with an outstanding television version around 1978- However, Charles Laughton was a simply great actor - I think the British film industry may have lost a gem of a film - it looks fantastic (what remains), and what a cast of fine actors - including Flora Robson Robert Newton and Emlym Williams -
@@anthonyfrew1571 i was fourteen and it was one of the times my parents hijacked the tv, usually for the bbc’s upstairs, downstairs for which i got a healthy dose. i’m not sure why but i, claudius did not appeal to me, despite all the risqué elements (which should have been right up my alley). i have memories of going in and out of the room with that theme song blasting, lot’s of togas and lot’s of screaming, mostly from julia … i sat down and watched it all the way through in the mid eighties and really enjoyed it. i have since gone back and watched it more times than i care to admit (i practically have the entire script memorized). the book(s) is, of course, different. almost no dialogue at all and there is almost nothing in the way of “punching,” the notion of taking an idea and “punching” it up for the audience. the bbc is full of punches and we have jack pullman to thank for that. for instance, in the book there is hardly any mention of the death of herod. in the series it was one of the most emotional scenes.
@@throckmorton3705 Thank you for your reply - it was a nice time capsule of a time and place -I did not watch the BBC version until the comparably recent reshowing
Amen to that ! It was a huge success & highly acclaimed when it played over here in the US on public television ! It was when most Americans first became aware of John Hurt and Derek Jacobi !
reminds me what we have lost....older theatrical actors who can kill these classical roles with such weight and gravitas...what have we got now......dull flat celebrity..no thks.
I became friends with Sian Phillips sever years back. Had the film been completed, we might never have had her brilliant performance so, for me, it’s double edged sword
I saw a play made for TV called I Claudius, 1977 I think it was KCTS 9 Seattle, it was really good Brain Blessed as Augustus, Dereck Jacob as Claudius. Very well done hasn't seen it since but the acting was really good.
Yes! It was distributed in the US by PBS where I first discovered it as a teenager... obviously a different interpretation but no less magnificent, simply smaller sound stages. I then HAD to read the Graves's books that it was based on, and I springboarded from that to reading ancient histories of all kinds. The more you read history, the more you realize that it is a soap opera...just simply a soap opera written by very human and biased historians...I owe Graves SO much...
@@igorschmidlapp6987 Yes, I realize that...Reading Graves's novels inspired me to read many actual histories of ancient Rome and the emperors...I've actually read different histories of the SAME emperor, and would you believe it, the different historians had different takes on the same history...! Historians have as many biases as novelists. But despite the varying Claudius histories, Graves keeps true to the vast majority of the accepted historical narrative. But few histories are readable/viewable as straight, dry histories...novelization and creating screenplays allow actors to "bring the history alive" and make it much more accessible.
I remember this documentary when it first came out in 1965. I would have been 17 and just left school but it made an indelible mark on my memory and l remain an avid fan of Laughton. Denham was Kordas base. When he made Sabu the elephant boy there were dozens of elephants dancing in Denham woods. The place should have been made a monument rather than replaced by luxury flats.
I remember the original transmission on the BBC was on Christmas Day 1965 - it beat all the "spectactulars" that were shown then and must have cost much more money than this wonderfully told story by Mr. Bogarde - he wasn't greedy with fees if a subject really interested him.
Interesting that Richard Strauss’s iconic Thus Spake Zarathustra was used for the opening music of this 1965 documentary a couple of years before Kubrick adopted it for his movie 2001 Space Odyssey in 1968!
This was very good. I'd read about this film in Graves' biography, and I'd also heard about the "Curse of Claudius" that existed until the BBC production finally aired in the '70s, but it was wonderful to see the parts of Korda's film that actually got filmed. Laughton's take on the character, when he finally "found" it, has some great moments, but clearly Derek Jacobi's performance was more nuanced and mere memorable. And trying to tell the story of "I, Claudius" and "Claudius the God" in one feature-length film would have done a disservice to the novels. For that reason alone I'm kind of glad the 1937 production was never completed. If it had been, and had failed, we might never have seen the great television the the BBC (and Masterpiece Theatre) brought us in 1978.
Odd that Charles Laughton had difficulty with this part considering the numerous brilliant performances he'd carried off, from Captain Bligh to Quasimodo to the barrister in Witness for the Prosecution. He even did a very passable comedic part playing an English butler serving a Texas hick.
Russ G Tell us observers of drama what passable role is Mr.Twitler playing, tapping out mad tweets in the predawn light, gorging on big Macs, and his own face in the mirror?
Laughton was a quite brilliant director (night of the hunter) another victim of Hollywood executive's ignorance and shortsightedness, they broke his heart... he never made another film history's loss..
@@kathyharbourne376 what abuse? since when is criticism abuse...are you a child? is English you first language? If you find my love of my fellow Brit to have come thru as anything other than sadness at the loss of a great British director, I pity your pompous myopic easily insulted naivety..get a life you troll.
Once, as a young lad in Manchester, in a time long ago, I waited outside the stage door of the Opera House for an autograph from Charles Laughton. There was vast crowd of fans waiting for him and I reckoned my chance of getting his signature was very low.
Quay Street runs up past the theatre and at the top of the road was the posh Midland Hotel. I thought there was a good chance that he was staying there and might actually walk down to the theater.
I left the crowd and turned up Quay Street and there coming towards me was the unmistakeable figure of the great actor. I dashed up to him and offered him my autograph album. He gave me a big smile and said he would sign for me at the stage door. He put his arm round my shoulder and we walked back to the stage door together. Laughton was pleasantness itself in our brief conversation.
At the stage door the crowd surged forward and I was pushed to one side. Charles Laughton stopped at the door, turned round and said "I'll sign for everybody, but him first", pointing to me. The crowd parted, like Charlton Heston parting the Red Sea, and I got my autograph.
I've never forgotten how kind Laughton was.
Beautiful
Beautiful
This comment is great.
One of the most wholesome youtube comments I’ve read. Thank you for sharing, sir!
great story!
I watched the ' I, Claudius' show as a kid in the 70's and it was fascinating, but I did not realize that the book was written in the 30's. Thanks to YT I learned something new
I agree with Dirk Bogarde: Laughton's speech before the Roman Senate is one of the most epic pieces of acting I've ever seen. What a tragedy that this film was never completed.
Bobbnoxious It should be read before the U.S.Senate, by the ghosts of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt(I said Bully Pulpit, not BS or a bully's pulpit), Franklin Roosevelt, and perhaps Bernie Sanders(not quite ghost but more ghost like, sorry Senator!).
What good fortune to have stumbled upon this brilliant documentary. Thank you.
Two minutes of this film is way better than two or three hours of the over the top CGI comic book epics being mass produced today.
This was clearly a showcase for Dirk. He’s radiantly beautiful, and a magnificent voice.
What a sumptuous, magnificent and touching film this would have been. A great tragedy that it did not come to fruition. The sets are glorious, stupendous...one is left with a gnawing sense of loss.
This is great. Thank you for sharing it. Dirk Bogarde has been my favorite actor since I was 13. It is lovely to see him like this.
What a wonderful film this would have been. These clips are marvellous
2023....Cladius speaks for the heart of millions of common man....Charles Laughton brought back Claudius from the dead. It was indeed a real resirrection!
resurrection
Well put.
It amazes me that such a great actor as Charles Laughton was could not find his character. From what I’ve seen, he was superb. He nailed it.
"I Claudius " would have been a masterpiece and Laughton acknowledged as the greatest of them all, not only by the ones who already admired his work but by everyone who had ever stepped inside a cinema. He deserved it, a man of an exceptional talent, a tormented soul, a theatrical genius. I could suggest Simon Callow's remarkable book "Charles Laughton a Difficult Actor" as well as Dirk Bogarde's autobiography "Snakes and Ladders" the latter to pay homage to a sensitive actor , Dirk Bogarde, writing about the demands and rewards of working with great directors. Penny Angelopoulou
OMG!! Those surviving scenes are soooo good! The gentleman playing Caligula is superb! Flora Robson and Charles Laughton. and Merle Oberon, to die for! Watching this is more interesting than the crap being made today.
Oh yes Caligula was great here , wasn't he! Played by Emlyn Williams, noted playwright and actor -- love his work.
What a sublime cast was assembled for this project...and as a bonus, hosted by the equally sublime Dirk Bogarde.
Splendid! Thanks very much for sharing this introduction by Dirk Bogarde. One of his few intros from the 1960s.
A fascinating programme -thanks for uploading
The one movie I so really wanted to see. Laughton was a great Claudius.
Dirk Bogarde is one of the greats. Thank you for this.
I am big fan of BBC I Claudius (1976). Later I read the books by Graves, and just in recent years heard about this unfinished movie. Great post. Thank you.
How interesting to hear that Flora Robson was chosen to play the elderly Livia , Yet in the BBC and activation Sian Phillips played the same role from beginning to end… And she always looked so elegant. Such a shame that BBC has blocked their version on copyright reasons… I really enjoyed this document that you posted thanks for sharing it with us
Have you tried ua-cam.com/channels/s2MyJZ3kMOwGKtDRsJ5olw.htmlvideos ?
It's heartbreaking that this adaptation was never finished. Even without a score or completed post production, it's so damn good. Damnit.
i feel so lucky watching this splendid documentary. real cinema history. such a great great cast. and i always have adored dirk van bogarde's work-his narrating/hosting this is sublime. i understand the difficulties actors go through preparing for roles. i've always had great admiration for charles laughton. just love everybody.
dirk bogarde is/was one of my favorite actors. same with charles laughton. i could really feel his pain struggling in his part with his lines and i thought him very brave. and wonderful. acting can be a killer and preparing-nightmarish. but it can also be terrific.
Simone Gad .best actor ever laughton
Charles Laughton was in my opinion one of the best film actors of all time. This film if it could have been completed would have added to Hunchback, Witness for..., Mutiny......, and Henry.....When you watch Laughton he is compelling.........
This is one precious piece of history to be treasured and held up as an example, not just the unfinished film but the documentary itself and it's belief in imperfect humanity.
Thank you for this wonderful treat!!!
Fantastic!!!
Laughton was such a genius. He remains the greatest British actor of all time. Not even Olivier could rival Laughton's emotional depth.
Ditto!
+Garry Harville Au contraire, mes amis. There is, and only will be, one Lord Olivier. "Emotional depth" brought to a performance is not so easy to obtain or achieve. Looking at the breath of both CL's and LO' acting careers, you realize that both actors were superb. Both could convey more with a gesture of the hand or movement of the head or eyes. To see LO on stage was breathtaking. CL's performance in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" had reviting moments. So let's keep things in perspective and avoid hyperbole.
+Em Gernant Best performance was in Hobson's Choise......one of my all time favourite films.
Drivel. He. was a competent actor like a great many others. Why does everyone always feel the need to exaggerate?
mikelheron20 - how DARE you say that?!
The best actor of all time in my opinion. Talented the way great painters are talented.
Read the books and watched the 1976 series many, many times. Its my favourite followed by Glenda Jackson in Elizabeth R. I so wish this film had been made. The parts that survive are wonderful.
Incredible presentation of "The Epic That Never Was", which is one of the several specials that first ever aired as part of PBS' Festival '77 Membership Pledge Drive on most PBS stations across the country including my local PBS station: KPBS San Diego, Circa Sunday March 13th, 1977, Some Great Things to See on Public TV!!
Really wish they could have completed this film.
I only hope there is an alternate reality in which this film was completed and I will be able to see it someday. I remember watching Laughton's Quasimodo as a child. Like many children, I was immune to the suffering of others, but in Laughton I discovered I could cry for someone else.
For the Gods' sakes, read the books! They were so beautifully crafted, you would believe that Claudius himself had actually written it.
My grandfather wrote and produced this!
That is such a great piece of music!
I haven’t seen this since college. I was fortunate to see it one evening with “The making of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid”. I, Claudius was wonderful!
Laughton truly was an emperor in Hollywood history! What a fabulous actor. He was without measure the best of his era.
Amazing documentary. Charles Laughton is possibly the most talented screen actor of all time. So sad to think all those featured are no longer with us.
Paul Lewis Its not that they really died young! If they were still with us they'd be nigh on 120!
We are getting on as well, without noticing it.
We might regret it, had they managed to hang on...sign of a good guest, knowing when to leave
Paul Lewis Wasn't that the TrumpBack of Notre Dame I saw hanging off one of those gargoyles, idiotically Tweeting out instructions to the Parisian firefighters, who muttered their Gallic cynicism sotto voice, and directed one of their spare water hoses straight at him; the orange tan melted, and the wannabe wouldabe emperor was seen to have what we all suspected, no clothes.
The inside story of movies like this is fascinating. Great work and to add there is just so much great movie and television coming from the U.K.
Best of luck on your channel.
Dirk Bogarde was a beautiful man with a wonderful voice. Such a pity the Claudius film was not completed.
Excellent, thanks. A brilliant first very long piece to camera by Mr Bogarde. Graves - ''Too many Hungarians''.
this was quite a treat.
Just the pieces give one a thrill.
OMG, not only is Dirk Bogarde one of the saddest losses to womankind ever, he makes this piece of film seem very modern with his presentation which seems so sophisticated and...human given the style of the day. And Thora Robson....glorious.
+Gina McGill Good to look at and a fine actor but you do realize he was gay don't you.
Hmm. A loss to "womankind"? You clearly don't know much about Dirk Bogarde.
Stuff like him being gay you mean? Clearly.....
And Thora? My goodness, some even suspected her of being a thespian.
Funny coincidence: Charles Laughton played Claudius in the unfinished 1937 film version of I, Claudius and years later would go on to play a senator named Gracchus in another movie about Rome. Derek Jacobi played Claudius in the BBC production of I, Claudius and years later would go on to play a senator named Gracchus in another movie about Rome.
Here's a scene from "Spartacus" that features Laughton as Gracchus, along with Peter Ustinov and Laurence Olivier. It is they who helped to make it the memorable and classic epic that it has become ...
ua-cam.com/video/SN-igTmfdiE/v-deo.html
I liked Jacobi in I Claudius, he is great
I saw that. What a fabulous series! I saw it in the States. Everybody watched and it was the talk of the town. Derek Jacobi was also great in it.
I have found this film most interesting; and have enjoyed seeing this, very much.
What a pity this film was never finished, surely it would have become an ageless classic.
Such a tragedy. It would have been a fabulous film.
One of the great films of all time. What a shame! Laughton is a genius.
Beautiful documentary thank you for uploading.
I didn't realise Robert Newton was in this unfinished epic!
Has anyone seen the Short on TCM where Peter Graves talks about working on "Night of The Hunter" with Laughton directing? He said it was sad that Charles didn't direct another movie because he was so good at it. The crew, especially himself and Mitchum, thought he was a natural and was so thoughtful. Graves spoke of doing a scene and when it was over he (Graves) asked Laughton "is that OK with you?" and Laughton returned with, "Was it OK with YOU?". Which, by the sound of it, Graves sounded pleasantly surprised because most directors are control freaks - not that this is a bad thing.
Ted Hackett. Remember the line from Airplane(1980)- I haven't felt this bad since- update, 2019, the last Trump tweet. It was actually said by a passenger on the ill fated aircraft this way: Since the last Ronald Reagan movie. Was living in LA that summer, saw Airplane in a movie theater; at this line, the audience erupted in uncontrollable laughter. Surely I'm hearing? Not at all- and don't call me Shirley.
jesting not hearing, above. Putin tweaked my Android again!
thanks so much for this! It was shown on PBS in the 70s but I missed it and have been hoping to see it ever since!
Laughton is superb--TY
This documentary was a class production just like charles who in my humble opinion is the greatest actor ever lived
Wow -- what a gem! Thank you ever so much.
Laughton and Dirk Bogarde? And Merle Oberon and Flora Robson? And Alexander Korda and Josef von Sternberg, and -- it flopped? Wow. Can't wait to watch this. Oh, thanks!
flyinspirals Not a flop. It was never finished.
Thank you so much for posting this. It was a fascinating story and we can only wonder at how great the outcome. had it been completed.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Brilliant. Thanks so much for uploading.
Thanks. That's the great thing about UA-cam. It's a vast archive of recordings of all kinds of subjects which you seldom, if ever, hear or see anywhere else!
The reviews of Charles are very respectful and nice to hear.
if you look for the word 'elegance' in the dictionary you'll find a picture of Dirk Bogard. if you look for the word 'acting', you'll find Charles Laughton.
Elegance indeed
Great presence and such a great name
DirK Bogarde... Sounds like a movie star
Imagine how marvelous this film would've been if they'd managed to complete it. Even just watching what we have of Laughton's performance, I'm moved. 😢
Edit. Claudius is thought by all, save his grandmother to be a fool, and he plays the part well. Yet in the scene where he faces Caligula, we see his pragmatic sharp wit at work as he "humbles" himself to save his skin. This is but a prelude to his eventual rise to the role of Emperor in the senate chamber with those marvelous speeches. God, Laughton was magnificent
I'd known for years some footage existed, but had no idea they'd done this documentary. Seeing those few precious completed scenes set every hair on end. What a massively tragic loss! I can't agree with Emlyn Williams. All artists suffer during this or that project. That's often what makes their work so brilliant, and this film would have been one of the greatest in cinema history. At least this documentary gives us a taste, if all too brief.
I agree. One of the greatest films of all time.
This film was being made at the same time as King George VI was beginning his reign after the abdication of his brother Edward VIII. As George VI had a terrible stutter, it was felt by many involved in this production that the portrayal and for the most part ridicule of an Emperor who also stuttered was unseemly and unpatriotic. It would have caused too much embarrassment to the King and I think this played some part in the decision by Korda to close down the production. Merle Oberon's accident was simply an excuse and provided them with a get out and a substantial insurance claim.
I watched a clip of Claudius's speech to the Senate and immediately set out to find where I could watch this movie, alas
This is all there is, as the movie was never finished.
Have had the 1976 I, CLAUDIUS disc set for years & finally got around to watching the set. Found I rather enjoyed it. Left you wanting to see Claudius survive.
Then there is THIS gem. In particular the parts beginning @ 46:30 up until he sees Caligula being quite clever & invoke a certain degree of worthy chuckles...at the wit of Laughton's Claudius. Derek Jacobi's take was a worthy successor & effectively flawless but I must say Laughton set a high bar with just these few surviving scenes alone that wasn't quite crossed. Even this Caligula delivery for that matter(!) with it's rather more lighthearted antithesis to John Hurt sadist...
I write this even as I finished watching the last scenes on the DVD. Wishing it had succeeded to be the full feature it was intended. Damn shame...
I Claudius. Great book. Great BBC series. Derek Jacobi. Brilliant supporting cast.
Thankfully the BBC came up with an outstanding television version around 1978- However, Charles Laughton was a simply great actor - I think the British film industry may have lost a gem of a film - it looks fantastic (what remains), and what a cast of fine actors - including Flora Robson Robert Newton and Emlym Williams -
it was around 76 …
Thank You - I watched it for the first time a couple of years ago - was not sure of the year
@@anthonyfrew1571 i was fourteen and it was one of the times my parents hijacked the tv, usually for the bbc’s upstairs, downstairs for which i got a healthy dose. i’m not sure why but i, claudius did not appeal to me, despite all the risqué elements (which should have been right up my alley). i have memories of going in and out of the room with that theme song blasting, lot’s of togas and lot’s of screaming, mostly from julia …
i sat down and watched it all the way through in the mid eighties and really enjoyed it. i have since gone back and watched it more times than i care to admit (i practically have the entire script memorized). the book(s) is, of course, different. almost no dialogue at all and there is almost nothing in the way of “punching,” the notion of taking an idea and “punching” it up for the audience. the bbc is full of punches and we have jack pullman to thank for that. for instance, in the book there is hardly any mention of the death of herod. in the series it was one of the most emotional scenes.
@@throckmorton3705 Thank you for your reply - it was a nice time capsule of a time and place -I did not watch the BBC version until the comparably recent reshowing
And then the BBC made the “I, Claudius” mini series and it was great!
Amen to that ! It was a huge success & highly acclaimed when it played over here in the US on public television ! It was when most Americans first became aware of John Hurt and Derek Jacobi !
Jacobi coppiced Laughton,..
"The Caesars" was better, I claudius was a sensationalist over the top soap opera.
This version looks better though
What a fantastic document. WOW
Kills me that von Sternberg didn’t get to finish this.
reminds me what we have lost....older theatrical actors who can kill these classical roles with such weight and gravitas...what have we got now......dull flat celebrity..no thks.
Thanks to u tube and the people who upload this priceless films and great actors they live forever Michelle UK
Fascinating. Thanks for sharing.
brilliant thanks for posting Matt NY
It's such a shame that this movie was never finished. It truly would've been "an Epic Movie!"
I became friends with Sian Phillips sever years back. Had the film been completed, we might never have had her brilliant performance so, for me, it’s double edged sword
Stupendous. Greater than Olivier. Amazing Flora ❤ and the breathtaking cinematography.
Marvelous documentary really enjoyed it
So glad!
thank you for such an informative upload. a most memorable video ..
Thank you for sharing
My pleasure
What a great find for a cool, quiet Saturday morning! Thanks for the upload :D
Great upload, thanks for sharing!!
Wow this is utterly brilliant, how did I never know about this.
I enjoyed the TV series, I think I would have enjoyed this too. To bad it was not finished. I was really getting into the finished clips.
I downloaded this Thank you for the excellent post
Amazing! I was just watching an interview with Elsa Lanchaster talking about it. Thnaks!!!!
I saw a play made for TV called I Claudius, 1977 I think it was KCTS 9 Seattle, it was really good Brain Blessed as Augustus, Dereck Jacob as Claudius. Very well done hasn't seen it since but the acting was really good.
Yes! It was distributed in the US by PBS where I first discovered it as a teenager... obviously a different interpretation but no less magnificent, simply smaller sound stages. I then HAD to read the Graves's books that it was based on, and I springboarded from that to reading ancient histories of all kinds. The more you read history, the more you realize that it is a soap opera...just simply a soap opera written by very human and biased historians...I owe Graves SO much...
bbc production with a low budget but brilliant script and acting
@@toAdmiller "I, Claudius" was a NOVEL, NOT history. BIG difference...
@@igorschmidlapp6987 indeed. A novel based *very* loosely on history but with heavily fictionalised elements
@@igorschmidlapp6987 Yes, I realize that...Reading Graves's novels inspired me to read many actual histories of ancient Rome and the emperors...I've actually read different histories of the SAME emperor, and would you believe it, the different historians had different takes on the same history...! Historians have as many biases as novelists.
But despite the varying Claudius histories, Graves keeps true to the vast majority of the accepted historical narrative. But few histories are readable/viewable as straight, dry histories...novelization and creating screenplays allow actors to "bring the history alive" and make it much more accessible.
Wow -- this would have been a fantastic film. The bits we did get to see were amazing.
I remember this documentary when it first came out in 1965. I would have been 17 and just left school but it made an indelible mark on my memory and l remain an avid fan of Laughton. Denham was Kordas base. When he made Sabu the elephant boy there were dozens of elephants dancing in Denham woods. The place should have been made a monument rather than replaced by luxury flats.
I remember the original transmission on the BBC was on Christmas Day 1965 - it beat all the "spectactulars" that were shown then and must have cost much more money than this wonderfully told story by Mr. Bogarde - he wasn't greedy with fees if a subject really interested him.
Thank you for the upload. Very enjoyable and very good quality.
I have a notion to second that emotion ! This is endlessly fascinating !
An excellent investigation and interviews
Interesting that Richard Strauss’s iconic Thus Spake Zarathustra was used for the opening music of this 1965 documentary a couple of years before Kubrick adopted it for his movie 2001 Space Odyssey in 1968!
Seems like they nearly finished the movie. Shame it wasn't completed. Some amazing work.
Hail Claudius aka Charles Laughton !!!!! BOTH as brilliant as the other.
This was very good. I'd read about this film in Graves' biography, and I'd also heard about the "Curse of Claudius" that existed until the BBC production finally aired in the '70s, but it was wonderful to see the parts of Korda's film that actually got filmed. Laughton's take on the character, when he finally "found" it, has some great moments, but clearly Derek Jacobi's performance was more nuanced and mere memorable. And trying to tell the story of "I, Claudius" and "Claudius the God" in one feature-length film would have done a disservice to the novels. For that reason alone I'm kind of glad the 1937 production was never completed. If it had been, and had failed, we might never have seen the great television the the BBC (and Masterpiece Theatre) brought us in 1978.
54:25 The most outstanding scene of Laughton as Claudius
Odd that Charles Laughton had difficulty with this part considering the numerous brilliant performances he'd carried off, from Captain Bligh to Quasimodo to the barrister in Witness for the Prosecution. He even did a very passable comedic part playing an English butler serving a Texas hick.
Russ G Tell us observers of drama what passable role is Mr.Twitler playing, tapping out mad tweets in the predawn light, gorging on big Macs, and his own face in the mirror?
@@bobbywimsy6741 None of your comments make any sense
I really think Emlyn Williams is outstanding in this lost film. Such a gem this short video is. At 40:33 there is the most wonderful part.
Such a shame not to have completed this production
Of I Cladius,truly a master piece
I only wish it could have been finished
A Masterpiece
So interesting. Every film buff should see it!
“my armies are revolting” - I love that line.
Laughton was a quite brilliant director (night of the hunter) another victim of Hollywood executive's ignorance and shortsightedness, they broke his heart... he never made another film history's loss..
What do you mean he never made another movie?
@@xplaybwoix he never directed another movie hence my post about the night of the hunter you NUMPTY..
@@kathyharbourne376 what abuse? since when is criticism abuse...are you a child? is English you first language? If you find my love of my fellow Brit to have come thru as anything other than sadness at the loss of a great British director, I pity your pompous myopic easily insulted naivety..get a life you troll.
@@francisdeans2744 NAME CALLER, how rude. 🤨
Phenomenal documentary.